A 150-Year History of Mechanical Engineering at Lehigh Stanley H

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

A 150-Year History of Mechanical Engineering at Lehigh Stanley H Lehigh University Lehigh Preserve Departmental and College Histories Lehigh History 2017 A 150-Year History of Mechanical Engineering at Lehigh Stanley H. Johnson Lehigh University Follow this and additional works at: http://preserve.lehigh.edu/lehigh-history Part of the Mechanical Engineering Commons Recommended Citation Johnson, Stanley H., "A 150-Year History of Mechanical Engineering at Lehigh" (2017). Departmental and College Histories. 4. http://preserve.lehigh.edu/lehigh-history/4 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Lehigh History at Lehigh Preserve. It has been accepted for inclusion in Departmental and College Histories by an authorized administrator of Lehigh Preserve. For more information, please contact [email protected]. A 150-YEAR HISTORY OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERING AT LEHIGH Compiled by Stanley H. Johnson, Emeritus Professor A 150-YEAR HISTORY OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERING AT LEHIGH Compiled by Stanley H. Johnson, Emeritus Professor There was mechanical engineering education at Lehigh from the very beginning, but it has taken various forms over the first 150 years, as will be seen. This compilation was undertaken at the urging of Chairman Gary Harlow. Several faculty were kind enough to contribute reminiscences to the recent history, extending the material available from the “Brown and White” and Lehigh catalogs. There is no claim of comprehensive thoroughness. Whatever the sources offered that seemed interesting and contributed to a feeling of the flavor of life in the department was included. The arrangement is approximately chronological and the content tends toward gossip at times. I hope readers are kept interested and gain an appreciation of the significant role our department has played on campus from the very beginning, 150 years ago. The story divided naturally into four sections plus a brief history of mechanics prior to merger 1. The history of mechanical engineering education at Lehigh from the first full year of classes, 1866, until 1914, the beginning of World War I. Joe Klein became the first professor of mechanical engineering in 1881. Tau Beta Pi was founded at Lehigh in 1885. 2. The tumultuous interwar years, 1918-1941, brought rapid changes and financial uncertainty. The early faculty consisted of two professors of ME and one professor of machine design. James Ward Packard gave $1,000,000 for the purpose of erecting the laboratory that became Packard Lab. 3. WWII disrupted campus life, but Army and Navy Specialized Training Programs maintained the student population. In 1946 there were 3,427 students enrolled, including 591 married students and 577 veterans. The Librascope General Precision computer arrived on campus. 4. Mechanics education began in 1945 as part of civil engineering and grew to become a prominent department under Ferdinand Beer in 1957. 5. The Mechanical Engineering and Mechanics departments merged. The national unrest over the Vietnam War impacted campus. Centers/institutes were established, “engineers” became “mountain hawks”, and the department expanded and diversified. 1 Early Years of the Mechanical Engineering Department, 1866-19141 Lehigh University was formally opened on Saturday, September 1, 1866, in the presence of the Trustees, the Faculty, the Students of the First Class, and invited guests. This opening was due to the determination of the Trustees to begin with two classes only, which would find ample accommodations in Christmas Hall, the building already erected on the park. (1) The entering First Classmen of 1867 included a future president of Lehigh, Henry S. Drinker. (2) Packer Hall (the present day UC) was to be ready for the reception of students on the first of September, 1868. (3) In their first two years, students were called First and Second Classmen and followed a common program before selecting one of five schools of technical coursework: General Literature; Civil Engineering; Mechanical Engineering; Mining and Metallurgy; and Analytical Chemistry. Those in the schools were called Junior and Senior Schoolmen. (4) According to the register (modern day course catalog), during study hours, students were required to be in their rooms unless they had received permission of absence from the president. There were 45 RULES FOR THE GOVERNMENT OF STUDENTS. The 45th rule said that no student shall enter any restaurant or place where intoxicating liquors are sold without the permission of the President. (5) The officers of the University were a president, professors, instructors, librarian, and janitor. (6) On September 1, 1867 there were 20 Junior and Senior Schoolmen. (7) The first University Day exercises were held on June 22, 1871. (8) Through the generosity of the Founder, the Hon. Asa Packer of Mauch Chunk, Pa., and by resolution of the Trustees, passed in July 1871, tuition was declared to be free in all branches and classes. (9) Entering tuition in 1867 had been $45 per term (10) increasing to $62.50 in 1869 and decreasing to $50 in 1870. (11) In February 1872, Chas. Mc Millan, C.E., was appointed professor of civil and mechanical engineering. (12) In 1873, The Engineering Society of The Lehigh University was established and organized under the auspices of the professor of engineering for the benefit of students of civil, mechanical, and mining engineering. (13) For 1875-76, Augustus Jay Dubois, C.E., Ph.D., professor of civil and mechanical engineering, (14) joined the faculty. The register of that academic year pointed out that the problems that the civil engineer would be called upon to solve are mainly statical problems involving the idea of rest or equilibrium, and the ends to be obtained in his constructions are stiffness, rigidity, and immobility. (15) The object of the mechanical, or more properly, dynamical engineer is not to avoid or prevent, but to produce motion. Thus the new names: School of Civil (Statical) Engineering; and School of Mechanical (Dynamical) Engineering. (16) Since the founding of the university, a limited number of graduates who desired to pursue their studies under the direction of the faculty were allowed to use the library and attend lectures during a term of three years, free of expense. (17) 1 Almost all of the information herein came from the Brown and White archives or the Lehigh course catalog archives. 2 In 1877, it was announced that graduates of the School of Mechanical (Dynamical) Engineering, by remaining an additional year and pursuing the appropriate course of study, could receive the degree of Civil Engineer (C.E.). (18) A similar offer was made to graduates of the School of Civil (Statical) Engineering. (18 p. 19) By remaining an additional year they could receive the degree of Mechanical Engineer (M.E.). The School of Mining and Metallurgy offered a fifth-year undergraduate program. (18 p. 26) The same year, the register first announced and published the requirements for post graduate degrees. (18 pp. 8-9) “The Faculty will recommend for the Degree of Master of Arts, candidates otherwise properly qualified, who after taking at this University the degree of Bachelor of Arts, shall pursue for at least two years, at the University, a course of liberal study approved by the Faculty, pass a thorough examination on the same, and present satisfactory theses. The Faculty will recommend for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy, candidates otherwise properly qualified, who after taking at this University either of the Degrees of Civil, Mechanical or Mining Engineer, or Analytical Chemist, shall pursue, for two years, at the University, a course of advanced Scientific study in Joseph F. Klein, D.E., first professor of the line of their profession, pass through a thorough examination mechanical engineering at Lehigh in the same, and present satisfactory theses. The Faculty will recommend for the Degree of Doctor of Science, candidates otherwise properly qualified, who after taking at this University the Degree of Bachelor of Science, shall pursue, for at least two years, at the University, a course of Scientific study, embracing two subjects approved by the Faculty, pass through a thorough examination, showing in one of these subjects special attainments, and shall present satisfactory theses in the one of the subjects, based upon original scientific investigation.” In 1877, S.R. Crumbaugh, M.A., LL.D., professor of civil and mechanical engineering, replaced Professor Dubois. (18 p. 4) The following year Mansfield Merriman, C.E., Ph.D., professor of civil and mechanical engineering, replaced Professor Crumbaugh. (19) In the register for 1878-79 the names “School of Civil Engineering” and “School of Mechanical Engineering” regained their previous forms. (19 pp. 18,21) In 1881, Professor Merriman became professor of civil engineering and Joseph F. Klein, D.E., joined the faculty as the first professor of mechanical engineering. (20) The School of Technology was formed by including: the Course in Civil Engineering; the Course in Mechanical Engineering; the Course in Mining and Metallurgy; and the Course in Chemistry. The degrees offered after four years of study were C.E.; M.E.; B.M., Bachelor of Metallurgy; and A.C., Analytical Chemist. The degree of E.M., Engineer of Mines, required a fifth year. (21) The graduate degrees offered were M.A., Ph.D., and D.Sc. (21 p. 42) 3 In 1883-1884, the post graduate degrees offered were M.A., M.S., and Ph.D. (22) The Advanced Course in Electricity was established. Instead of an extended department of Electrical Engineering, it was thought best to offer a course occupying not more than one year and presenting very fully the purely electrical portion of an Electrical Engineering course. (22 p. 53) In 1888, the Course in Electrical Engineering and Physics replaced the one-year Advanced Course in Electricity. The degree of Electrical Engineer (E.E.) would be given to graduates of this course. (23) In 1889, the Course in Architecture was added. (24) The School of Technology included six distinct courses: civil engineering, mechanical engineering, mining and metallurgy, Electrical engineering, chemistry and architecture.
Recommended publications
  • He Newcomen Society American Branch
    . - ASA PACKER: 1805-1879 Vita 3 'Pt Decmber 29, 1805: Born at Mystic, New London County, Connect-: icut, the son of Elisha Packer, Jr. I 8 2 2 :Walked to Susquehanna County, Pennsylvania; became a carpenter by trade. January 23,1828: Married Sarah M. Blakslee, daughter of Zopher Blakslee. z 83 3 :Moved to Mauch Chunk. 18 4 r - z 843 :Pennsylvania House of Representatives. z 843 - z 8q 8 :Associate Judge of Carbon County, at count Mauch Chunk. z 85 2 - 18 5 5 :Built Ibe Lebigb Valley Railroad. r 853 - z 85 7 :Member of U.S. House of Representatives, ocrat from 13th District, Pennsylvania. z 8 6 5 :Founded and endowed Lebigb University. r 8 6 8 :Received votes of Pennsylvania Delegation as Democra nominee for President of the United States. r 8 6 9 :Democratic nominee for Governor of Pennsylvania; def -... by narrow margin. I 8 7 6 :Commissioner of fie Centmniol Exposition, Philadelphia. Januaty 23,1878: GokWedding. May 17,1879: Died at Philadelphia. ASA PACKER 1805-1879 "We be in ibe Story of haPacker not on a Decem% er day of 1805, at the home of his fathers in New England, but on a sunny Indian Summer afternoon of October 1938,in a country cemetery on a Pennsylvania hillslope overlook- ing his beloved Mauch Chunk." -MILTONC. STUART HE Connecticut carpenter who became: "TCaptain of 1ndzcstt-y; Pbilanthopisf; and Public Servant. "He built Tbe Lebigb Valley Railroad, and was potent factor in developing the commerce and industrv and fostering the social and educa- tional Gowth of tbc &tire region of tbc Lcbigb YalZey .
    [Show full text]
  • The Struggles of a Mathematician and His University to Enter the Ranks of Research Mathematics, 1870–1950
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Elsevier - Publisher Connector Historia Mathematica 34 (2007) 271–288 www.elsevier.com/locate/yhmat Straddling centuries: The struggles of a mathematician and his university to enter the ranks of research mathematics, 1870–1950 David E. Zitarelli ∗ Temple University, Philadelphia, PA 19122, USA Abstract This paper weaves two interlocking histories together. One strand of the fabric traces the development of the American mathe- matician Joseph B. Reynolds from a peripheral player to an active contributor to mathematics, astronomy, and engineering and to the founding of a sectional association of mathematicians. The other piece describes the evolution of his institution, Lehigh Uni- versity, from its founding in 1865 to a full-fledged research department that began producing doctorates in 1939. Both Reynolds and Lehigh straddled the line between the pre- and post-Chicago eras in American mathematics. © 2006 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. Zusammenfassung In dieser Arbeit werden zwei ineinander greifend Geschichten dargestellt. Einen Teil der verflochtenen Geschichte bildet die Entwicklung des amerikanischen Mathematikers Joseph B. Reynolds von einer Randerscheinung sowohl zu einem aktiven Autor mathematischer und astronomischer Arbeiten sowie solcher aus den Ingenieurswissenschaften als auch zu einem Begründer einer sektionalen mathematischen Gesellschaft. Der andere Teil der Geschichte betrifft die Gründung seiner akademischen Einrichtung, der Lehigh University, von ihrer Gründung 1865 bis zu einer reifen Forschungsabteilung in den 1939 Jahre Promotionen aufweisen konnte. Sowohl Reynolds als auch die Lehigh University können als Scharnier zwischen der Vor- und Nach-Chicagoer Ära in der amerikanischen Mathematik betrachtet werden.
    [Show full text]
  • Table of Contents
    www.lehighsports.com TABLE OF CONTENTS A MESSAGE FROM THE DEAN 1 CHAMPIONS 2 ACADEMIC SUCCESS 4 COMPETITIVE EXCELLENCE 6 COMMUNITY INVOLVEMENT 10 LEADERSHIP DEVELPOMENT 12 SPECIAL ACHIEVEMENT 14 40 YEARS OF WOMEN 16 GET CONNECTED 18 HALL OF FAME 20 CAMPUS ATHLETICS 22 ATHLETICS PARTNERSHIP 24 HONOR ROLL 28 A MESSAGE FROM THE DEAN OF ATHLETICS Dear Athletics Partners, When I reflect on the many and varied accomplishments of the 2010-2011 academic year, the prevailing image that comes to mind is the quality and devotion of the people involved. The student-athletes, coaches, professional staff, graduate assistants, volunteers, and alumni and community partners are the kind of people that inspire the commitment required to achieve success despite increasingly competitive circumstances. You will read about some of these people in the pages that follow, however please know that there are many more that make up our Lehigh Athletics family. Collectively, I believe we have established the kind of environment where achieving at very high levels is expected. Those of you who have invested in us have done so with the expectation that our educational efforts will produce distinctive results. Your trust inspires us to be uncompromising on quality and to push ourselves and our student-athletes to fulfill ambitions that some might describe as unrealistic. Athletically, we want our teams and individual student-athletes to win, to win championships, and to compete against programs that challenge us to stretch and grow. Yet, we also expect our student- athletes to achieve in the classroom and to lead by example among their campus peers as well as through their commitments to serving others who may be less fortunate.
    [Show full text]
  • Academic and Research Facilities
    Lehigh University 2021-22 1 Academic and Research Facilities In the following list, the first date after the name of each building chemical engineering and Energy Research Center have major indicates the year of construction. The second date indicates the year research facilities. It is also the headquarters of the “Fleet of the of a major addition. Future” program. Building C (1968, 2013, 2018). Once Bethlehem Steel's 1960s- Johnson Hall (1955). The building houses the university health era industrial-research facility, Building C is now being transformed service, and counseling service. Earle F. “Coxey“ Johnson ‘07, a (high-bay by high-bay since 2013) into a 21st Century learning director of General Motors Corp. and university trustee, provided environment initiative where Lehigh student's pursue creative and funding for the structure. innovative answers to challenges and open-ended questions. In Jordan Hall (1958). One of the original Bethlehem Steel buildings, 2018, a beautifully restored three-story crescent welcomed faculty this facility now houses the Military Science and Leadership program from Computer Science and Engineering and Industrial Systems (Army ROTC) and the Distance Education Department. Engineering departments, Mountaintop Initiative, and the Institute for Data Science and Computational Intelligence. In 2019, the Lamberton Hall (1907). The structure served as the university Department of Art, Architecture and Design moved into Highbays C1 commons and dining room until the renovation of Packer Hall in and C3, as well as, a portion of the crescent. 1958. The building honors the memory of Robert A. Lamberton, third president. In January of 2006 it reopened as a late-night diner called Chandler-Ullmann Hall (1883, 1938, 2019).
    [Show full text]
  • Lancaster County Court House
    THE PENNSYLVANIA SOCIETY 203 23, 1866, the State Legislature passed a special act incorporating Scran- ton as a city. It was reorganized as a city of the third class under the act of 1874. The census of 1900 made it a city of the second class, a rank it assumed January 15, 1901. Its present form of city govern- ment was obtained from an act of May, 1911. It is the greatest coal-mining city in the world. SCRANTON.-Taylor Memorial. Window for John T. Taylor and his wife Rachel E. Roberts in St. Luke's P. E. Church, unveiled October 29. ---Z_ _ = . < = K~~~~~r LANCASTER COUNTY COURT HOUSE Lancaster County CHRISTIANA (near) Octoraro Farmers' Club. Sixtieth anniver- sary commemorated in Jackson's Grove, September 16. 204 THE PENNSYLVANIA SOCIETY COLERAIN TOWNSHIP. Union Presbyterian Church. One hun- dreth anniversary, August 29. The raising of subscriptions for a church building began in 1811; the first edifice was completed in 1814. The Union Presbyterian Church was organized in 1816, and the first pastor installed in the following year. The building was enlarged in 1851, and the present structure was erected in 1869. It was enlarged and repaired in 1898-1899. DRUMORE.-Drumore Friends' Meeting House. One hundreth anniversary, September 30. ELIZABETHTOWN.-Berks Home, Masonic Homes, dedicated July 26. Erected by the Masonic Lodges of Berks County. ELIZABETHTOWN.-Allegheny County Memorial Cottages. Cor- nerstone laid September 4. Hon. Louis A. Watres, Member of The Pennsylvania Society, presided. ELIZABETHTOWN.-Philadelphia Free Masons' Memorial Hospi- tal. Presentation of the first unit, October 14. Address of acceptance by the Grand Master, Louis A.
    [Show full text]
  • K Is in Charge of the Rev
    OUR SUPREME TASK by Bishop Freeman WITNESS CHICAGO, ILL., MAY 23, 1935 S , - — I I ilÄZi K THE NEW CHAPEL At the Bethlehem Cathedral x x xc - txzxxzjx yx y x xx y x s s y y xx nf r Circulation Office: 6140 Cottage Grove Avenue. Chicago. Editorial and Advertising Office: 826 Tribune Building, New York City. Copyright 2020. Archives of the Episcopal Church / DFMS. Permission required for reuse and publication. SCHOOLS OF THE CHURCH SCHOOLS SJlje (general ©^enlngiral HE best Secondary Schools in SAINT MARY’S HAIL T the country are maintained Protestant Episcopal. 69th year. Junior and Seminary Senior High School. Accredited college prep­ by the Episcopal Church. If you aration and comprehensive general courses. Three-year undergraduate course are thinking of sending a son or Junior College. Beautiful new buildings, modernly equipped. Gymnasium and out-of- of prescribed and elective study. a daughter away to school this door sports. Catalog. Miss Katharine Caley, Fourth-year course for gradu­ Fa * I and care to have information A. B., Box W, Faribault, Minn. ates, offering larger opportunity about these schools merely send for specialization. a note to the editorial office of Provision for more advanced work, leading to degrees of S.T.M. THE WITNESS, 826 Tribune CHATHAM HA and S.T.D. Building, New York. Age, part A Church School _ in Southern Virginia of country preferred and price for Girls ADDRESS range will help us to get you Rev. Edmund J. Lee, D.D. more accurate information. Rector TH E DEAN Chatham Virginia 4 Chelsea Square New York City ST.
    [Show full text]
  • AN ENDURING LEGACY Celebrating the Presidency of Alice P
    SPRING 2014 LEHIGH BULLETIN AN ENDURING LEGACY Celebrating the presidency of Alice P. Gast 2 | LEHIGH BULLETIN INTERNATIONAL BAZAAR CAPTION EARTHAfter a longDAY and RELATED historically CAPTION stormy winter— Afterthe snowiest a long and on recordhistorically in South stormy Bethlehem winter— SPRINGthesince snowiest theARRIVES. 1993-1994 on record FINALLY. academic in South year— Bethlehem AftersinceLehigh’s a long the beautiful 1993-1994and historically campus academic finally stormy year— came winter— the Lehigh’stosnowiest life in latebeautiful on April. record campus Photo in Southby finally Christa Bethlehem came Neu sinceto thelife in1993-1994 late April. Photoacademic by Christa year— Neu Lehigh’s beautiful campus finally came to life in late April. Photo by Christa Neu SPRING 2014 | 1 UP FRONT STAFF Volume 100, Number 2, Spring 2014 STAFF EDITOR Tim Hyland [email protected] ASSOCIATE EDITORS Kurt Pfitzer, Karl Brisseaux ’11 CONTRIBUTING WRITERS Mike Unger, Carla Prieto ’14 Brian M. Schleter, Rosa Rojas, Linda Harbrecht, Robert Nichols, Dawn Thren DESIGN Pentagram DESIGN DIRECTOR Kurt Hansen ART DIRECTOR David Pryor PHOTOGRAPHER Christa Neu DAWN COOPER DAWN BUSINESS SUPPORT Sue Gaugler CONTACT US Lehigh University Alumni Association 27 Memorial Drive West Bethlehem, PA 18015-3734 (610) 758-3135 Fax: (610) 758-3316 Honoring Alice P. Gast Hotline: (610) 758-alum CLASS NOTES AND REMEMBRANCES Diana Skowronski (610) 758-3675 WHEN WE BEGAN WORK on this issue of the ry is a truly powerful one, and well worth a read. [email protected] Bulletin, we knew we had a real challenge on Coverage of energy expert and Pulitzer SUBSCRIBERS our hands. After all, Lehigh President Alice P.
    [Show full text]
  • College of Education: 100 Years of Excellence Robert L
    Lehigh University Lehigh Preserve Departmental and College Histories Lehigh History 2016 College of Education: 100 Years of Excellence Robert L. Leight Lehigh University Iveta Silova Lehigh University Fatih Aktas Lehigh University Follow this and additional works at: http://preserve.lehigh.edu/lehigh-history Part of the Education Commons Recommended Citation Leight, Robert L.; Silova, Iveta; and Aktas, Fatih, "College of Education: 100 Years of Excellence" (2016). Departmental and College Histories. 3. http://preserve.lehigh.edu/lehigh-history/3 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Lehigh History at Lehigh Preserve. It has been accepted for inclusion in Departmental and College Histories by an authorized administrator of Lehigh Preserve. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Lehigh University College of Education 100 Years of Excellence Robert L. Leight, Iveta Silova, and Fatih Aktas Lehigh University College of Education: 100 Years of Excellence Prologue Introduction Acknowledgment Chapter 1 Creating a Foundation Chapter 2 Institutionalizing Education Degree Programs Chapter 3 From Department to School of Education Chapter 4 From School of Education to College Chapter 5 National Recognition Chapter 6 Centennial School Chapter 7 New Directions in Education Research and Practice at the College of Education Schools Appendix Written and edited by Robert L. Leight, Iveta Silova, and Fatih Aktas Published by Lehigh University College of Education All Rights Reserved, 2016. Prologue “What’s past is prologue.” —William Shakespeare, The Tempest Although Lehigh University traces its founding to 1865, the formal study of education did not begin at Lehigh until early in the twentieth century. During the nineteenth century another type of institution, the normal school, prepared most teachers for the “common,” or public schools.
    [Show full text]
  • Weiss Family of Weissport, Pennsylvania Papers Coll.216 Finding Aid Prepared by Garrett Boos
    Weiss family of Weissport, Pennsylvania papers Coll.216 Finding aid prepared by Garrett Boos. Last updated on December 18, 2012. Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia 2011.01.11 Weiss family of Weissport, Pennsylvania papers Table of Contents Summary Information....................................................................................................................................3 Biography/History..........................................................................................................................................4 Scope and Contents....................................................................................................................................... 4 Administrative Information........................................................................................................................... 5 Related Materials........................................................................................................................................... 6 Controlled Access Headings..........................................................................................................................6 Collection Inventory...................................................................................................................................... 8 - Page 2 - Weiss family of Weissport, Pennsylvania papers Summary Information Repository Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia Creator Weiss, Jacob, 1750-1839 Title Weiss family of Weissport, Pennsylvania papers Call number Coll.216
    [Show full text]
  • Lehigh Mens Lacrosse 2014 Prospectus.Pdf
    2014 LEHIGH MEN’S LACROSSE • SEASON PROSPECTUS • PAGE 2 QUICK FACTS UNIVERSITY 2014 SCHEDULE Location Bethlehem, Pa. 18015 February Founded 1865 by Asa Packer 1 at Furman 1:00 Undergraduate Enrollment 4,700 8 MARQUETTE 12:00 President Dr. Alice P. Gast 15 VILLANOVA 3:00 Murray H. Goodman ‘48 Dean of Athletics Joe Sterrett 22 at Boston University* 1:00 Athletic Dept. Phone (610) 758-4300 Mountain Hawks Nickname March Mascot Clutch 1 LOYOLA 12:00 Colors Brown and White 8 at Bucknell* 12:00 Home Field Ulrich Sports Complex National Affiliation NCAA Division I 11 at Yale 7:00 Conference Patriot League 15 NAVY* 2:00 22 at Army* 12:00 LACROSSE 26 MONMOUTH 7:00 Head Coach Kevin Cassese (Duke ’03) 29 HOLY CROSS* 2:00 Email, Phone [email protected], (610) 758-4917 Career Record/Seasons 51-44/6 April Assistant Coaches Brendan Callahan (Stony Brook ‘07) 5 COLGATE (1) 2:00 Errol Wilson (Stony Brook ‘06) 8 at Princeton (ESPNU) 7:30 Will Scudder (Lehigh ‘11) 12 vs. Georgetown (2) 7:00 Director of Quality Control Tom Cassese (C.W. Post ‘67) 18 at Lafayette 7:00 2013 Record 12-5 22 Patriot League First Round 2013 Patriot League Record/Finish 6-0/1st 25 Patriot League Semifinals Starters Returning/Lost 5/5 27 Patriot League Championship Players Returning/Lost 31/18 Newcomers 14 May 10-11 NCAA First Round (3) (Campus Sites) HISTORICAL QUICK FACTS 17-18 NCAA Quarterfinals (4) First Season of Lacrosse 1885 24 NCAA Semifinals (5) National Championships 7 26 NCAA Championship (5) (Outright Championships: 1890, 1893, 1921; Shared titles: 1914, 1916, 1917, 1920)
    [Show full text]
  • 2012 Community Impact Report
    2012 Community Impact Report As a 1977 Freedom High School graduate now living in Denver, my family and I have “ attended many wonderful concerts and events at Musikfest over the years. Since the new facilities have opened at SteelStacks, we’ve already seen several shows and are very grateful for all that ArtsQuest, its staff, donors, members and volunteers have done to move Bethlehem so far forward on the arts and entertainment scene. Bethlehem now really rocks better! ” – Eric J. Schachter 1600 1500 1400 1200 Number of Concerts & 1000 Programs presented 800 638 annually by 557 ArtsQuest 600 400 295 200 0 1984 1994 2004 2012 1993 1998 2011 Christkindlmarkt Banana Factory SteelStacks Bethlehem begins opens opens PHOTO BY JOE LEDVA FRONT COVER PHOTOS: KEITH HUYLEBROECK (UPPER LEFT), DAVID HAPPEL (UPPER RIGHT), FRANK T. SMITH (LOWER LEFT), MARK DEMKO (LOWER RIGHT) BACK COVER PHOTOS: CRAIG ROBERTS (UPPER LEFT), MARK DEMKO (UPPER RIGHT), ADRIANNE ZIMMERMAN (BOTTOM) Access to the Arts 365 Welcome to the 2012 ArtsQuest Community Impact Report which looks back on a landmark and incredibly important year. In 2012, ArtsQuest™ ArtsQuest 2012 by the Numbers presented over 1,500 classes, concerts and events, with more than 60 percent of our programming available to the community free of charge. 1,200,000 - Festivals & Events Attendance Think about that for a minute. 10,000-plus – Youth Enjoying Free From Grammy-nominated artists at the Levitt Pavilion to New York-based Arts Programming & dancers on the Air Products Town Square to musicians from 28 states Activities and six countries who performed at Musikfest, few communities in the United States have access to the breadth of programming that ArtsQuest 1,500 - Total Classes, Concerts & ™ offered in 2012, our first full year of operations at SteelStacks .
    [Show full text]
  • PARKING: GOODMAN CAMPUS  All Game Day Parking for Spectators (Visitors, Parents, Friends, Alumni) Is in the Stabler Arena Parking Lots
    PARKING: GOODMAN CAMPUS All game day parking for spectators (visitors, parents, friends, alumni) is in the Stabler Arena Parking Lots. Spectator parking is not permitted in the Cundey Varsity House parking lot. Cundey Varsity House lot is reserved for Lehigh University Student-Athletes, Coaches and game officials only. Spectators must park in a legal parking space or in designated areas as directed by parking attendants. Do not block exit ways or fire lanes. Parking spaces are available on a first-come, first-serve basis. Patrons and not permitted to save spaces for future arrivals. No parking is permitted along Goodman Drive or on the roadway between Rauch Fieldhouse and Stabler Arena All parking pass holders for reserved lot areas must display the appropriate parking permit at all times. All parking is subject to change as directed by event staff Any illegally parked vehicles are subject to be ticketed and/or towed at the owner’s expense Please lock your vehicle. Lehigh Athletics is not responsible for fire, theft, damage and/or loss of the vehicle or any content. ASA PACKER CAMPUS All game day parking for spectators (visitors, parents, friends, alumni) are in the Alumni Parking Pavilion, the Zoellner Arts Center Parking Garage and the Campus Square Garage (bottom level meter parking). a. Metered visitor parking is available in the Alumni Parking Pavilion and the Campus Square Garage (bottom level). Zoellner Arts Center Parking Garage: Visitors may park in the ZAC garage for $1.00 entry fee during regular operating hours. Game day spectator parking options o Option 1 – Park and pay at a meter or pay by space location in the Alumni Parking Pavilion, Campus Square Garage, or Zoellner Arts Center Parking Garage.
    [Show full text]